作者BIASONICA (my desired happiness)
看板Hornets
标题[TimesPicayune] Odds stacked against Hornets
时间Wed May 5 04:45:20 2004
http://www.nola.com/hornets/t-p/index.ssf?/base/sports-1/1083662853260510.xml
Odds stacked against Hornets
Visiting team rarely has won a Game 7
Tuesday, May 04, 2004
By Jimmy Smith
Staff writer
MIAMI -- It happens in the NBA about as often as Shaquille O'Neal
has a perfect night at the free-throw line.
Call it rare.
In the history of the league, only 15 of 85 times has a visiting
team won the seventh game of a playoff series.
Hornets forward P.J Brown knows what it feels like to be on the
wrong end of the score. As a member of the Miami Heat, Brown
watched as the New York Knicks won the decisive game in the 2000
Eastern Conference semifinals. Brown would like to experience the
euphoria this time around as the Hornets and Heat face off tonight
in the final game of the last first-round playoff series still
undecided.
"It's a tough feeling, losing on your home floor, it's something
you never forget," Brown said, resurrecting a bitter memory. "It's
very disappointing to do that in front of your home fans. You just
know that it's basically do or die. There is no Game 8.
"It's tough. There's a lot of intensity. . . . It's the most crucial
game. It's everything. Everything that has happened in the first six
games culminates in that Game 7. Both teams are fighting to stay
alive and advance. They're going to give everything they have.
They're a team that'll never give up and quit, and we're going to do
the same. We expect it to be another nail-biter."
This is the 86th time since the NBA was founded in 1946-47 that a
seven-game series has gone the limit.
Not only will the Hornets be facing a Heat team that has won 15
straight games in its home arena, in front of a raucous crowd, but
New Orleans also will be attempting to stare down history as well.
The Hornets never have won a seven-game series, losing their only
previous effort at Milwaukee in the Eastern Conference semifinals
in 2001.
Only seven times previously has a team started a seven-game series
down 0-2 and come back to win the series.
And the Hornets have lost five straight games to the Heat at
AmericanAirlines Arena, two in the regular season and all three
playoff games in this first-round affair.
"Things are definitely in their favor," Brown said. "They're on their
home court. They don't have a reason to feel scared. They've
accomplished a lot the last couple of weeks, but, hey, the odds have
to change somewhere. They got to lose one. The odds say they can't
keep winning at home forever. Why not now?"
New Orleans had two excellent opportunities to halt that Miami
winning streak in Game 1 and Game 5 here, wrapped around a 30-point
blowout victory by the Heat in Game 2 of the series.
But neither time could the Hornets close out the Heat.
"We've got to finish this time," Brown said.
Yet point guard Baron Davis is aware that history isn't exactly on
the Hornets' side.
"But this is not an easy proposition at all," Davis said. "We've had
a Game 7 before in a tough environment in Milwaukee and came up short.
Obviously, that's still in our head.
"So we're really motivated for this one, going into the game with the
utmost confidence. You don't want to not go to practice the next day.
I know everybody on this team has been in this situation where we've
been eliminated.
"We don't want to have to wake up and say if we'd have gotten one more
rebound, or one more block out, or taken a charge here. . . . We know
everything we have to do and lay it all out there."
Brown, 0-3 in his career in seventh games, said the Heat discovered
Sunday in New Orleans Arena just how difficult a task it is to shut
the door on a playoff opponent.
"Closeout games are the hardest games to win in a series," Brown said.
"I don't care if you're up 3-0 or 3-2 or 3-1, that fourth game is the
hardest game to put away. They learned that lesson (Sunday)."
. . . . . . .
Jimmy Smith can be reached at
[email protected] or (504) 826-3814.
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